Respiratory Viral Infections from 2015 to 2022 in the HIVE Cohort of American Households: Incidence, illness characteristics, and seasonality.

Publication date: Aug 24, 2024

Viral respiratory illnesses are the most common acute illnesses experienced and generally follow a predicted pattern over time. The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic interrupted that pattern. The HIVE (Household Influenza Vaccine Evaluation) study was established in 2010 to follow a cohort of Southeast Michigan households over time. Initially focused on influenza, surveillance was expanded to include other major respiratory pathogens, and, starting in 2015, the population was followed year-round. Symptoms of acute illness were reported, and respiratory specimens were collected and tested to identify viral infections. Based on the known population being followed, virus-specific incidence was calculated. From 2015 to 2022, 1755 participants were followed in HIVE for 7785 person-years with 7833 illnesses documented. Before the pandemic, rhinovirus (RV) and common cold human coronaviruses (HCoVs) were the viruses most frequently identified, and incidence decreased with increasing age. Type A influenza was next but with comparable incidence by age. Parainfluenza and respiratory syncytial viruses were less frequent overall, followed by human metapneumoviruses. Incidence was highest in young children, but infections were frequently documented in all age groups. Seasonality followed patterns established decades ago. The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic disrupted these patterns, except for RV and, to a lesser extent, HCoVs. In the first two years of the pandemic, RV incidence far exceeded that of SARS-CoV-2. Longitudinal cohort studies are important in comparing the incidence, seasonality, and characteristics of different respiratory viral infections. Studies documented the differential effect of the pandemic on the incidence of respiratory viruses in addition to SARS-CoV-2.

Concepts Keywords
Coronaviruses cohort studies
Household coronaviruses
Michigan influenza
Pandemic Respiratory infections
respiratory viruses
rhinoviruses
RSV
SARS-CoV-2

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Viral Infections
disease VO time
disease MESH Influenza
disease VO vaccine
disease VO population
disease MESH common cold
disease VO Viruses
disease MESH Parainfluenza
disease MESH infections
disease MESH Respiratory infections

Original Article

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